I. Purpose and Framing
- Intended as an internal, pastoral reflection tool rather than a public evaluative instrument
- Aims at awareness, encouragement, and growth among pastors and elders
- Emphasizes discernment and Berean vigilance, even when using modern tools
- Rooted explicitly in a Covenantal Reformed theological framework
II. The Shepherd Metaphor in Covenantal Reformed Theology
A. Theological Foundation
- The Church as the New Covenant flock of God
- Christ as the Chief Shepherd; elders as accountable under-shepherds
- Continuity between Old Testament Israel and the New Testament Church
- Linguistic and functional unity of pastor, elder, overseer, and shepherd
B. Biblical Background
- Yahweh as Shepherd of Israel (e.g., Psalms, Ezekiel)
- Fulfillment of shepherd imagery in Christ
- Extension of shepherding responsibility to church officers
III. Job Description of the Literal Shepherd
A. Context
- Ancient Near Eastern shepherding as the controlling background for the metaphor
B. Primary Duties
- Feeding – securing daily physical nourishment
- Protection – defending against predators and thieves
- Guidance – leading along safe and productive paths
- Healing and Rescue – caring for the injured and recovering the lost
- Intimate Knowledge – knowing individual sheep personally
C. Character of the Role
- Physical proximity
- Constant vigilance
- Sacrificial and often dangerous labor
IV. Job Description of the Church Elder (Under-Shepherd)
A. Stewardship Principle
- The flock belongs to God, not the elder
- Authority is delegated, not possessed
B. Primary Duties
- Feeding – preaching and teaching the Word
- Protection – guarding against false doctrine and moral corruption
- Guidance – discipleship, counsel, and modeled godliness
- Healing and Rescue – restoration of the afflicted and wandering
- Oversight – servant-leadership in governance and care
C. Manner of Service
- Willing, eager, exemplary
- Free from domination, compulsion, or self-interest
V. Side-by-Side Comparison
A. Areas Compared
- Nature of the flock
- Type of sustenance
- Nature of threats
- Method of leading
- Rescue and healing
- Source of authority
- End goals
- Compensation
- Accountability
B. Central Contrast
- Temporal vs. eternal focus
- Physical survival vs. spiritual maturity and faithfulness
VI. Key Overlaps Between the Two Roles
- Sacrificial love
- Intimate knowledge of the flock
- Vigilant watchfulness
- Active pursuit of the lost
VII. Key Distinctions in the Covenantal Reformed View
-
Weaponry
- Physical tools vs. spiritual means (Word, discipline, prayer)
-
Ownership
- Human ownership vs. divine possession purchased by Christ
-
Outcome
- Temporal productivity vs. faithfulness and sanctification
- Final evaluation deferred to the appearance of the Chief Shepherd
Summary of Key Elements
At its heart, this comparison argues that church leadership is not a managerial role but a shepherding vocation, patterned after the concrete realities of ancient shepherding and elevated to eternal significance under the New Covenant.
The literal shepherd provides the lived, historical framework: total responsibility, constant presence, personal knowledge, and sacrificial risk for the well-being of vulnerable sheep in a hostile environment.
The church elder, as an under-shepherd, carries these same relational and moral demands but applies them to the spiritual and eternal welfare of God’s covenant people. Feeding, protecting, guiding, healing, and pursuing remain the core tasks, though the means are spiritual rather than physical.
The overlaps underscore the shared heart posture: love, vigilance, knowledge, and pursuit. The distinctions guard against clerical overreach, reminding elders that:
- the flock is not theirs,
- their authority is ministerial, not proprietary,
- and their success is measured by faithfulness, not visible outcomes.
Taken together, this framework offers a sobering yet hopeful lens for self-examination—well suited for internal assessment, mutual encouragement, and renewed dependence on the Chief Shepherd, whose appearing alone brings final vindication.